Surviving the Odd is the heartfelt and witty memoir by Candi Milo, a
three-time Annie Award-nominated voice actor and daughter of the late
entertainer Tony Milo, dubbed "Mr. Dynamite" by the legendary columnist
Herb Caen. In 1968, Governor Ronald Reagan emptied California's mental
hospitals, leaving hundreds of thousands of mentally ill and emotionally
disturbed people homeless on the streets. With no medical training or
higher education, Tony Milo started a halfway house called Milo Arms for
the mentally ill and treated them like his own family. He ran the home
while raising five children, including Candi, who was bright, curious,
and mouthy. Candi watched and learned from her father the real
definition of family and the value of empathy, inspiring her work as a
performer and an advocate.